10 results on '"Jaber, Birgit"'
Search Results
2. Correction to: Risdiplam in Patients Previously Treated with Other Therapies for Spinal Muscular Atrophy: An Interim Analysis from the JEWELFISH Study
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Chiriboga, Claudia A., Bruno, Claudio, Duong, Tina, Fischer, Dirk, Mercuri, Eugenio, Kirschner, Janbernd, Kostera-Pruszczyk, Anna, Jaber, Birgit, Gorni, Ksenija, Kletzl, Heidemarie, Carruthers, Imogen, Martin, Carmen, Warren, Francis, Scalco, Renata S., Wagner, Kathryn R., and Muntoni, Francesco
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- 2023
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3. Risdiplam in Patients Previously Treated with Other Therapies for Spinal Muscular Atrophy: An Interim Analysis from the JEWELFISH Study
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Chiriboga, Claudia A., Bruno, Claudio, Duong, Tina, Fischer, Dirk, Mercuri, Eugenio, Kirschner, Janbernd, Kostera-Pruszczyk, Anna, Jaber, Birgit, Gorni, Ksenija, Kletzl, Heidemarie, Carruthers, Imogen, Martin, Carmen, Warren, Francis, Scalco, Renata S., Wagner, Kathryn R., and Muntoni, Francesco
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- 2023
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4. Safety and efficacy of risdiplam in patients with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy (FIREFISH part 2): secondary analyses from an open-label trial
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Volpe, Joseph J, Posner, John, Kellner, Ulrich, Quinlivan, Rosaline, Gerber, Marianne, Khwaja, Omar, Scalco, Renata S, Seabrook, Timothy, Koch, Armin, Balikova, Irina, Joniau, Inge, Accou, Geraldine, Tahon, Valentine, Wittevrongel, Sylvia, De Vos, Elke, de Holanda Mendonça, Rodrigo, Matsui Jr, Ciro, Fornazieri Darcie, Ana Letícia, Machado, Cleide, Kiyoko Oyamada, Maria, Martini, Joyce, Polido, Graziela, Rodrigues Iannicelli, Juliana, Caires de Oliveira Achili Ferreira, Juliana, Hu, Chaoping, Zhu, Xiaomei, Qian, Chen, Shen, Li, Li, Hui, Shi, Yiyun, Zhou, Shuizhen, Xiao, Ying, Zhou, Zhenxuan, Wang, Sujuan, Sang, Tian, Wei, Cuijie, Dong, Hui, Cao, Yiwen, Wen, Jing, Li, Wenzhu, Qin, Lun, Barisic, Nina, Celovec, Ivan, Galiot Delic, Martina, Ivkic, Petra Kristina, Vukojevic, Nenad, Kern, Ivana, Najdanovic, Boris, Skugor, Marin, Tomas, Josipa, Boespflug-Tanguy, Odile, De Lucia, Silvana, Seferian, Andrea, Barreau, Emmanuel, Mnafek, Nabila, Peche, Helene, Grange, Allison, Trang Nguyen, Diem, Milascevic, Darko, Tachibana, Shotaro, Pagliano, Emanuela, Bianchi Marzoli, Stefania, Santarsiero, Diletta, Garcia Sierra, Myriam, Tremolada, Gemma, Arnoldi, Maria Teresa, Vigano, Marta, Dosi, Claudia, Zanin, Riccardo, Schembri, Veronica, Brolatti, Noemi, Rao, Giuseppe, Tassara, Elisa, Morando, Simone, Tacchetti, Paola, Pedemonte, Marina, Priolo, Enrico, Sposetti, Lorenza, Comi, Giacomo Pietro, Govoni, Alessandra, Osnaghi, Silvia Gabriella, Minorini, Valeria, Abbati, Francesca, Fassini, Federica, Foa, Michaela, Lopopolo, Amalia, Pane, Marika, Palermo, Concetta, Pera, Maria Carmela, Amorelli, Giulia Maria, Barresi, Costanza, D'Amico, Guglielmo, Orazi, Lorenzo, Coratti, Giorgia, Leone, Daniela, Laura, Antonaci, De Sanctis, Roberto, Berti, Beatrice, Kimura, Naoki, Takeshima, Yasuhiro, Shimomura, Hideki, Lee, Tomoko, Gomi, Fumi, Morimatsu, Takanobu, Furukawa, Toru, Stodolska-Koberda, Urszula, Waskowska, Agnieszka, Kolendo, Jagoda, Sobierajska-Rek, Agnieszka, Modrzejewska, Sandra, Lemska, Anna, Melnik, Evgenia, Artemyeva, Svetlana, Leppenen, Natalya, Yupatova, Nataliya, Monakhova, Anastasya, Papina, Yulia, Shidlovsckaia, Olga, Litvinova, Elena, Enzmann, Cornelia, Galiart, Elea, Gugleta, Konstantin, Wondrusch Haschke, Christine, Topaloglu, Haluk, Oncel, Ibrahim, Ertugrul, Nesibe Eroglu, Konuskan, Bahadir, Eldem, Bora, Kadayifçilar, Sibel, Alemdaroglu, Ipek, Sari, Seher, Bilgin, Neslihan, Karaduman, Aynur Ayse, Sarikaya, Fatma Gokcem Yildiz, Graham, Robert J, Ghosh, Partha, Casavant, David, Levine, Alexis, Titus, Rachael, Engelbrekt, Amanda, Ambrosio, Lucia, Fulton, Anne, Baglieri, Anna Maria, Dias, Courtney, Maczek, Elizabeth, Pasternak, Amy, Beres, Shannon, Duong, Tina, Gee, Richard, Young, Sally, Masson, Riccardo, Mazurkiewicz-Bełdzińska, Maria, Rose, Kristy, Servais, Laurent, Xiong, Hui, Zanoteli, Edmar, Baranello, Giovanni, Bruno, Claudio, Day, John W, Deconinck, Nicolas, Klein, Andrea, Mercuri, Eugenio, Vlodavets, Dmitry, Wang, Yi, Dodman, Angela, El-Khairi, Muna, Gorni, Ksenija, Jaber, Birgit, Kletzl, Heidemarie, Gaki, Eleni, Fontoura, Paulo, and Darras, Basil T
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- 2022
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5. Effect of mild or moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetics of risdiplam.
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Kletzl, Heidemarie, Ajmi, Hassan, Antys, Izabela, Heinig, Katja, Jaber, Birgit, Marbury, Thomas C., Young, Annie, and Günther, Andreas
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PHARMACOKINETICS ,BODY mass index - Abstract
Aim: This phase I, multicentre, open‐label, nonrandomised, parallel‐group, two‐part study aimed to evaluate the effect of mild to moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetics (PK), safety and tolerability of a single oral dose of risdiplam. Methods: Adult subjects (aged 18‐70 years) with mild (Child‐Pugh Class A; Part 1) or moderate (Child‐Pugh Class B; Part 2) hepatic impairment were matched with subjects with normal hepatic function on sex, age, body mass index and smoking status. Each subject received a single oral dose of 5 mg of risdiplam. Plasma concentrations of risdiplam and its metabolite M1 were measured and PK parameters were compared. Adverse events, laboratory abnormalities, vital signs and electrocardiogram measurements were assessed. Results: After a single dose (5 mg) of risdiplam, the risdiplam PK parameters area under the plasma concentration‐time curve from time zero to infinity and maximum observed plasma concentration were approximately 20% and 5% lower, respectively, in subjects with mild hepatic impairment and approximately 8% and 20% higher, respectively, in subjects with moderate hepatic impairment compared with subjects with normal hepatic function. These differences were not statistically significant; all 90% confidence intervals for geometric least squares‐means ratios spanned unity. No new risdiplam‐related safety findings were observed in subjects with mild or moderate hepatic impairment. Conclusion: Mild or moderate hepatic impairment did not have a clinically relevant impact on the PK of risdiplam. Therefore, no dose adjustment is required in patients with mild or moderate hepatic impairment when receiving risdiplam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Risdiplam treatment has not led to retinal toxicity in patients with spinal muscular atrophy.
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Sergott, Robert C., Amorelli, Giulia M., Baranello, Giovanni, Barreau, Emmanuel, Beres, Shannon, Kane, Steven, Mercuri, Eugenio, Orazi, Lorenzo, SantaMaria, Melissa, Tremolada, Gemma, Santarsiero, Diletta, Waskowska, Agnieszka, Yashiro, Shigeko, Denk, Nora, Fürst‐Recktenwald, Sabine, Gerber, Marianne, Gorni, Ksenija, Jaber, Birgit, Jacobsen, Bjoern, and Mueller, Lutz
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SPINAL muscular atrophy ,VISUAL acuity ,OPTICAL coherence tomography ,CHILD patients ,VISUAL fields - Abstract
Objective: Evaluation of ophthalmologic safety with focus on retinal safety in patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) treated with risdiplam (EVRYSDI®), a survival of motor neuron 2 splicing modifier associated with retinal toxicity in monkeys. Risdiplam was approved recently for the treatment of patients with SMA, aged ≥ 2 months in the United States, and is currently under Health Authority review in the EU. Methods: Subjects included patients with SMA aged 2 months–60 years enrolled in the FIREFISH, SUNFISH, and JEWELFISH clinical trials for risdiplam. Ophthalmologic assessments, including functional assessments (age‐appropriate visual acuity and visual field) and imaging (spectral domain optical coherence tomography [SD‐OCT], fundus photography, and fundus autofluorescence [FAF]), were conducted at baseline and every 2–6 months depending on study and assessment. SD‐OCT, FAF, fundus photography, and threshold perimetry were evaluated by an independent, masked reading center. Adverse events (AEs) were reported throughout the study. Results: A total of 245 patients receiving risdiplam were assessed. Comprehensive, high‐quality, ophthalmologic monitoring assessing retinal structure and visual function showed no retinal structural or functional changes. In the youngest patients, SD‐OCT findings of normal retinal maturation were observed. AEs involving eye disorders were not suggestive of risdiplam‐induced toxicity and resolved with ongoing treatment. Interpretation: Extensive ophthalmologic monitoring conducted in studies in patients with SMA confirmed that risdiplam does not induce ophthalmologic toxicity in pediatric or adult patients with SMA at the therapeutic dose. These results suggest that safety ophthalmologic monitoring is not needed in patients receiving risdiplam, as also reflected in the United States Prescribing Information for risdiplam. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. A phase 1 healthy male volunteer single escalating dose study of the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of risdiplam (RG7916, RO7034067), a SMN2 splicing modifier.
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Sturm, Stefan, Günther, Andreas, Jaber, Birgit, Jordan, Paul, Al Kotbi, Nada, Parkar, Nikhat, Cleary, Yumi, Frances, Nicolas, Bergauer, Tobias, Heinig, Katja, Kletzl, Heidemarie, Marquet, Anne, Ratni, Hasane, Poirier, Agnès, Müller, Lutz, Czech, Christian, and Khwaja, Omar
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MOTOR neuron diseases ,CLINICAL trials ,MESSENGER RNA ,NEURODEGENERATION ,PHARMACOKINETICS - Abstract
Aims: Risdiplam (RG7916, RO7034067) is an orally administered, centrally and peripherally distributed, survival of motor neuron 2 (SMN2) mRNA splicing modifier for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). The objectives of this entry‐into‐human study were to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics of risdiplam, and the effect of the strong CYP3A inhibitor itraconazole on the PK of risdiplam in healthy male volunteers. Methods: Part 1 had a randomized, double‐blind, adaptive design with 25 subjects receiving single ascending oral doses of risdiplam (ranging from 0.6–18.0 mg, n = 18) or placebo (n = 7). A Bayesian framework was applied to estimate risdiplam's effect on SMN2 mRNA. The effect of multiple doses of itraconazole on the PK of risdiplam was also assessed using a two‐period cross‐over design (n = 8). Results: Risdiplam in the fasted or fed state was well tolerated. Risdiplam exhibited linear PK over the dose range with a multi‐phasic decline with a mean terminal half‐life of 40–69 h. Food had no relevant effect, and itraconazole had only a minor effect on plasma PK indicating a low fraction of risdiplam metabolized by CYP3A. The highest tested dose of 18.0 mg risdiplam led to approximately 41% (95% confidence interval 27–55%) of the estimated maximum increase in SMN2 mRNA. Conclusions: Risdiplam was well tolerated and proof of mechanism was demonstrated by the intended shift in SMN2 splicing towards full‐length SMN2 mRNA. Based on these data, Phase 2/3 studies of risdiplam in patients with SMA are now ongoing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Safety of infusing rituximab at a more rapid rate in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: results from the RATE-RA study.
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Pritchard, Charles H., Greenwald, Maria W., Kremer, Joel M., Gaylis, Norman B., Rigby, William, Zlotnick, Steve, Chung, Carol, Jaber, Birgit, and Reiss, William
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RITUXIMAB ,RHEUMATOID arthritis treatment ,INFUSION therapy ,DRUG administration ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background As recommended in the current prescribing information, rituximab infusions in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) take 4.25 hours for the first infusion and 3.25 hours for subsequent infusions, which is a burden on patients and the health care system. We therefore evaluated the safety of infusing rituximab at a faster rate for an infusion period of 2 hours in patients with RA. Methods Patients with an inadequate response to anti-TNF who were rituximab-naive or -experienced received 2 courses of rituximab: Infusion 1 (Day 1) was administered over the standard 4.25 hours, and Infusions 2 (Day 15), 3 (Day 168) and 4 (Day 182) were administered over a faster 2-hour period. The primary endpoint was incidence of infusion-related reactions (IRRs) associated with Infusion 2. Results Of the 351 patients enrolled, 87% and 13% were rituximab-naive and -experienced, respectively. The incidence (95% CI) of IRRs associated with Infusion 1 was 16.2% (12.5%, 20.5%) and consistent with weighted historical incidence of 20.7% (19.4%, 22.1%). The incidence (95% CI) of IRRs associated with Infusions 2, 3, and 4 compared with respective weighted historical incidences at the standard infusion rate was 6.5% (4.1%, 9.7%) vs 8.1% (7.2%, 9.1%); 5.9% (3.5%, 9.3%) vs 11.5% (10.3%, 12.8%); and 0.7 (0.1%, 2.6%) vs 5.0% (4.2%, 6.0%), respectively. All IRRs were grade 1 or 2, except for 3 grade 3 IRRs associated with Infusion 1 and 2 grade 3 IRRs associated with Infusion 2. Four patients experienced a total of 5 grade 3 IRRs; 3 of these patients continued on to received subsequent infusions at the faster rate. There were no serious IRRs. Conclusion This study demonstrated that rituximab can be administered at the faster infusion rate at the second and subsequent infusions without increasing the rate or severity of IRRs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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9. Moclobemide Safety.
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HILTON, SUSAN, JABER, BIRGIT, and RUCH, ROSE
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- 1995
10. Safety and efficacy of risdiplam in patients with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy (FIREFISH part 2): secondary analyses from an open-label trial.
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Masson, Riccardo, Mazurkiewicz-Bełdzińska, Maria, Rose, Kristy, Servais, Laurent, Xiong, Hui, Zanoteli, Edmar, Baranello, Giovanni, Bruno, Claudio, Day, John W, Deconinck, Nicolas, Klein, Andrea, Mercuri, Eugenio, Vlodavets, Dmitry, Wang, Yi, Dodman, Angela, El-Khairi, Muna, Gorni, Ksenija, Jaber, Birgit, Kletzl, Heidemarie, and Gaki, Eleni
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SPINAL muscular atrophy , *RESPIRATORY infections , *SECONDARY analysis , *TODDLERS development , *NATURAL history - Abstract
Background: Risdiplam is an orally administered therapy that modifies pre-mRNA splicing of the survival of motor neuron 2 (SMN2) gene and is approved for the treatment of spinal muscular atrophy. The FIREFISH study is investigating the safety and efficacy of risdiplam in treated infants with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy versus historical controls. The primary endpoint of part 2 of the FIREFISH study showed that infants with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy attained the ability to sit without support for at least 5 s after 12 months of treatment. Here, we report on the safety and efficacy of risdiplam in FIREFISH part 2 over 24 months of treatment.Methods: FIREFISH is an ongoing, multicentre, open-label, two-part study. In FIREFISH part 2, eligible infants (aged 1-7 months at enrolment, with a genetically confirmed diagnosis of spinal muscular atrophy, and two SMN2 gene copies) were enrolled in 14 hospitals in ten countries across Europe, North America, South America, and Asia. Risdiplam was orally administered once daily at 0·2 mg/kg for infants between 5 months and 2 years of age; once an infant reached 2 years of age, the dose was increased to 0·25 mg/kg. Infants younger than 5 months started at 0·04 mg/kg (infants between 1 month and 3 months old) or 0·08 mg/kg (infants between 3 months and 5 months old), and this starting dose was adjusted to 0·2 mg/kg once pharmacokinetic data were available for each infant. The primary and secondary endpoints included in the statistical hierarchy and assessed at month 12 have been reported previously. Here we present the remainder of the secondary efficacy endpoints that were included in the statistical hierarchy at month 24: the ability to sit without support for at least 30 s, to stand alone, and to walk alone, as assessed by the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, third edition gross motor subscale. These three endpoints were compared with a performance criterion of 5% that was defined based on the natural history of type 1 spinal muscular atrophy; the results were considered statistically significant if the lower limit of the two-sided 90% CI was above the 5% threshold. FIREFISH is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02913482. Recruitment is closed; the 36-month extension period of the study is ongoing.Findings: Between March 13 and Nov 19, 2018, 41 infants were enrolled in FIREFISH part 2. After 24 months of treatment, 38 infants were ongoing in the study and 18 infants (44% [90% CI 31-58]) were able to sit without support for at least 30 s (p<0·0001 compared with the performance criterion derived from the natural history of untreated infants with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy). No infants could stand alone (0 [90% CI 0-7]) or walk alone (0 [0-7]) after 24 months of treatment. The most frequently reported adverse event was upper respiratory tract infection, in 22 infants (54%); the most common serious adverse events were pneumonia in 16 infants (39%) and respiratory distress in three infants (7%).Interpretation: Treatment with risdiplam over 24 months resulted in continual improvements in motor function and achievement of developmental motor milestones. The FIREFISH open-label extension phase will provide additional evidence regarding long-term safety and efficacy of risdiplam.Funding: F Hoffmann-La Roche. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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